On Tuesday 09 October 2007 17:52:09 G T Smith wrote:
John E. Perry wrote:
G T Smith wrote:
...NT user accounts are frequently dynamically created on the local machine on login and the account removed on logout, accounts and their settings exist on the network NOT the machine (I am unaware of anything similar on *NIX). The approach has its problems but works well enough...
After all the really good stuff you've contributed, this is a real shocker, so maybe I'm not understanding what you're saying.
I worked in a facility a few years ago (late '90's) where there were dozens of antique Suns, of the 10MHz Sparc, 128M RAM, 50MB disk variety, and a few late-model, high-power machines. We got a new sysadmin who, within a few days, had us all set up with an nfs-shared central home directory on a large, fast machine. We could log in from anywhere in the facility and have our own complete working environment, with all our personal environment, file structure, and home-based programs. I even had him set up my machine (one of the slowest, smallest, oldest) to work as an X-terminal to one of the largest, most powerful, but little used machines, and the only difference between running my applications on the Ultra and on my klunky little desktop was that my machine had only 256 colors available for display.
Doesn't this qualify as dynamically created on the local machine? and on the intermediate machine? Solaris is unix, you're aware?
John Perry
Sorry, had come across this now that you remind me (I think it was called yellow pages, Suntools or something and was not pure NFS but had a network administrative layer of some sort... ).. I had completely forgotten about it!... must be going senile :-/ ..
It has nothing to do with the directory. AD, NDS, LDAP or Yellow Pages have absolutely nothing to do with this kind of automatic mounting. It's just a simpler way of centrally administering the whole thing (saves having to copy round lots of config files, /etc/passwd and so on), but it's perfectly doable, albeit more cumbersome, without -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org